School of Nursing and Midwifery, Flinders University, Renmark, South Australia.
J Clin Nurs. 2010 Mar;19(5-6):605-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2009.03060.x.
To investigate the effectiveness of brief interventions for adolescent alcohol misuse and to determine if these interventions are useful in reducing alcohol consumption. To determine if brief interventions could be used successfully by nurses in the clinical setting.
Australian adolescents are consuming risky levels of alcohol in ever increasing numbers. The fiscal, health-related and social costs of this alcohol misuse are rising at an alarming rate and must be addressed as a matter of priority. Brief interventions have been used with some success for adult problem drinkers in the clinical setting. Brief interventions delivered in the clinical setting by nurses who are 'on the scene' are therefore a potential strategy to redress the epidemic of adolescent alcohol misuse.
Literature review.
Multiple databases were searched to locate randomised controlled trials published within the past 10 years, with participants aged 12-25 years. Included studies used brief intervention strategies specific to alcohol reduction. Fourteen studies met these criteria and were reviewed.
A range of different interventions, settings, participant age-ranges and outcome measures were used, limiting generalisability to the studied populations. No trials were carried out by nurses and only one took place in Australia. Motivational interviewing (one form of brief intervention) was partially successful, with the most encouraging results relating to harm minimisation. Long-term follow-up trials using motivational interviewing reported significant reductions in alcohol intake and harmful effects, but this may be partially attributed to a normal maturation trend to a steady reduction in alcohol consumption.
No single intervention could be confidently recommended due to confounding evidence. However, successful elements of past studies warrant further investigation. These include face-to-face, one-session, motivational interviewing-style brief interventions, focusing on harm minimisation and all with long-term follow-up.
The introduction of brief interventions in the hospital setting has the potential to address the epidemic of adolescent alcohol misuse. Nurses are well placed to deliver these interventions, but a standardised approach is required to ensure consistency. Further research is urgently needed to ensure clinical practice is based on the best available evidence and to ensure findings are more relevant to Australian adolescents and to nurses in a clinical setting.
调查针对青少年酗酒的简短干预措施的有效性,并确定这些干预措施是否有助于减少饮酒量。确定护士在临床环境中是否可以成功地使用简短干预措施。
澳大利亚青少年的饮酒量越来越高,达到了危险水平。这种酗酒行为的财政、健康相关和社会成本正在以惊人的速度上升,必须作为优先事项加以解决。简短干预措施已在临床环境中针对成年问题饮酒者取得了一定成效。因此,由在现场的护士提供的、在临床环境中实施的简短干预措施,是解决青少年酗酒问题的一种潜在策略。
文献综述。
搜索了多个数据库,以找到过去 10 年内发表的随机对照试验,参与者年龄在 12-25 岁之间。纳入的研究使用了专门针对减少饮酒量的简短干预策略。符合这些标准的 14 项研究被进行了综述。
使用了不同的干预措施、设置、参与者年龄范围和结果衡量标准,限制了研究人群的可推广性。没有由护士进行的试验,只有一项试验在澳大利亚进行。动机性访谈(一种简短干预措施)取得了部分成功,最令人鼓舞的结果与伤害最小化有关。使用动机性访谈进行的长期随访试验报告称,饮酒量和有害影响显著减少,但这可能部分归因于正常的成熟趋势,即饮酒量稳步减少。
由于证据混杂,无法自信地推荐单一干预措施。然而,过去研究的成功因素值得进一步研究。这些因素包括面对面、一次性、以动机性访谈为风格的简短干预措施,重点关注伤害最小化,并且都有长期随访。
在医院环境中引入简短干预措施有可能解决青少年酗酒的流行问题。护士非常适合提供这些干预措施,但需要采用标准化方法以确保一致性。迫切需要进一步研究,以确保临床实践基于最佳现有证据,并确保研究结果更能反映澳大利亚青少年和临床环境中的护士的情况。